For Gotham, Commissioner Gordon has always been a great hero.
Among Batman's older and most reliable friends is James Gordon. Gordon is one of the main factors keeping Batman from violating his one rule; Police Commissioner Gordon works nonstop to eradicate corruption in the police department. Gordon makes it abundantly evident that should Batman violate his no-kill rule, he will do all in his ability to haul him in for murder. Gordon's granddaughter seems to be equally committed to serving others since she has assumed the profession of a physician attending to elderly patients. Though she doesn't know it, her unassuming work has made her an ally to Batman.
Working together on a similarly historical approach to Superman from DC Black Label, the same Russell/Allred creative team produced. Superman: DC Comics currently offers both digital and collected editions of Space Age.
The Best Friends are Batman and James Gordon.
Though it's not clear exactly what fate will befall this world, Pariah is here and clearly cannot be good. Should James Gordon's grandchild arrive to the main DC Universe, she could run across her parents, most likely her father, Dick Grayson, and mother, Barb Gordon. For them, this may be a pivotal moment; DC seems to be already suggesting it with reference to Nightwing and Barbara Gordon's new kid. Either way, James Gordon's family will always support Batman. This is guaranteed.
Available May 28th from DC Comics is Batman: Dark Age #3!
DC formally introduces the startling relative of an iconic Gotham Hero.
Characters in the Bat-Family often find themselves settling down and beginning families. For years, Nightwing and Batgirl have been flirting with the concept; Batman has tried marriage and has had children. But the unexpected granddaughter DC has just unveiled comes from eminent family guy Commissioner James Gordon.
Mark Russell and Michael Allred's Dark Age #3 is recounted from Batman's point of view as he resides in a nursing home penning a book on his former exploits. Inspired by his psychiatrist—who happens to be the granddaughter of James Gordon, Nightwing and Barbara Gordon—shown on new preview pages—he accomplishes this at her encouragement.
Batman's History: An Amazing Turn
Although this family tree seems like a little bit of entertaining trivia, it could have far more significance. Batman: Dark Age is not only any arbitrary "elseworld" universe. Pariah, who also shows on these sample pages, has already visited it. Pariah only appears on worlds before instantaneous devastation strikes, and (save from Superman: Space Age) he has never been portrayed appearing in an Elseworld narrative, hinting that this world has actual relevance in the DC Mult universe. Gordon's granddaughter would find great fascination in some of these figures maybe crossing with the regular DC Universe.
Batman: Dark Age presents an other interpretation of the character. Bruce doesn't go to the Movies with his parents and totally misses their deaths instead of witnessing his parents dead in front of him in Crime Alley. Batman also finds up in Vietnam, where he receives the training he employs to fight criminals.
Batman is: who?
Batman, the vigilante superhero identity of wealthy Bruce Wayne, is among DC's most recognisable heroes. Bruce devoted his life to become the top martial artist, investigator, and tactician in the world after sorrow with the death of his parents drove him. Bruce battles evil as the dark knight of his homeland, Gotham City, assembling a whole family of allies and sidekicks.
Batman typically chooses to use his own intelligence to outsmart his opponent even if he has a great collection of tools, weapons, and vehicles. He depends on plans and smarting his enemies. Considered as the best investigator in the DC Universe, Batman's slyness is a potent weapon against evil.